The Spectator
18 July 2015 Aus
Al-Qaeda could end up the big winners in Syria
Fear has driven the Arab states to support the West’s great enemy
Australia
Shorten’s mensis horribilis
One problem of being Opposition leader is getting air time. They yearn for cut-through moments when the full focus of…
Australian Columnists
Royal diary
The first time I met the Queen, I was eight years old and she was visiting my school, in Brentwood,…
Australian Features
Why conservatives should love Shorten
Tony Abbott’s best chance of winning the next election is the person the PM’s supporters are so keen to destroy
Queering their pitch
Advocates of same sex marriage are disingenuous in their calls for open debate
Dockside humour
Thuggery on Australia’s waterfronts has a long and, er, proud history
Features
Al-Qaeda could end up the big winners in Syria
Fear of Isis is leading the Arab states to lend support to the lesser of two evils
Greece Notebook
Despite the sadness, it feels very safe here. Even the riot police are relaxed, cheerfully feeding the birds
Africa’s most wanted
An Ethiopian called Ghermay Ermias is the dangerous and elusive criminal behind Europe’s migrant crisis
God’s new business plan
Justin Welby wants to focus on growth – and has City high-flyers on hand to help him do it. Can he take his fractious Church with him?
A wolf in the kitchen
The fad for owning animals from films is a reflection of humans’ disrespect for nature
Who dares lies
Christopher Lee never exactly lied about his creditable wartime record, but he encouraged its embellishment. It’s a surprisingly common story
Blue is the collar
Stephen Crabb, the working-class Welsh Secretary with a fondness for Margaret Thatcher
The Week
Portrait of the week
Home The government postponed a Commons vote on relaxing the Hunting Act in England and Wales after the Scottish National…
On Wimbledon grunters
Hurrah for the Wimbledon men’s finalists, who played without emitting revolting gasps
Answering the call of duty
From ‘Education and Honour’, The Spectator, 17 July 1915: The young man who has been to a Public School or…
Columnists
Jeremy Corbyn’s extraordinary success is a coup for the Tories
If he becomes Labour leader, the party will move further leftwards
I’m emigrating to Islamic State – see ya, kafirs!
There’s plenty I can find to do out there, and if I don’t like it I’ll just come back
Ten resolutions that should make my next 50 years pass more smoothly
If all goes according to plan, the next 50 years will pass much more smoothly
A deal for the good of the world, but in Vienna rather than Brussels
Plus: a woman for Barclays? And a new comedy of confusion for our times
Books
A bad novel on the way to a good one
Harper Lee’s publishers are much to blame for resurrecting this piece of confused juvenilia. It should have remained where it belongs — in the bottom drawer
Lovely house of ill repute
The Mistresses of Cliveden by Natalie Livingstone explores the great house’s exotic history, ending with Christine Keeler, the swimming pool and the Profumo Affair
Reality games
A searing satire set in a dystopic future,Victor Pelevin’s 2011 S.N.U.F.F. — now brilliantly translated into English — has been hailed as a prescient warning of Russia’s intentions in Ukraine
The rich are a different species
Wednesday Martin’s Primates of Park Avenue mocks New York’s high-maintenance ‘mommies’ who worry sleeplessly over money, infidelity and dieting. But they are a much stranger breed than this memoir makes out
Mission near impossible
Tension mounts in Saul David’s compulsive chronicle of hijacked Air France Flight 139 and the rush to save the hostages in Entebbe 40 years ago
One événement after another
The more inconvenient, bloodstained événements of French history are dismissed as ‘aberrations’, organised by ‘enemies of the fatherland’, according to Jonathan Fenby’s latest History of Modern France
Anyone for ice tennis?
In his survey of the world’s most ludicrous and best-forgotten sports, Edward Brooke-Hitching reveals the extraordinary cruelty and inventiveness of mankind at play
Stately Spanish galleons with gold moidores
Columbus’s discovery of America led to a glorious literary and artistic flowering in early modern Spain, according to Robert Goodwin’s Spain: The Centre of the World, 1519–1682
The murderous gangs who run the world
According to Zero Zero Zero by Roberto Saviano and Dreamland by Sam Quinones, the flow of Class A drugs around the world is now unstoppable, and traffickers have grown increasingly violent. If only the trade were regulated, all this could change
Steyin’ alive
What are the odds that one of the world’s best political commentators happens to be an expert on the songs…
Arts
The London ear
It’s easy to tag the terrain of the capital city by writer. But what might a map of its music look like?, wonders Philip Clark
All you need is love
Plus: knives and nudity from Wendy Whelan and Edward Watson at the Linbury Studio Theatre
He wuz robbed!
Lucas Debargue, the 24-year-old French pianist with a riveting backstory, is the only competitor anyone is talking about
To tell you the truth…
It’s just two charmless, boring men sitting across the table from each other being charmless and boring
Scholarship and folly
Plus: Soundscapes at the National Gallery reviewed: Martin Gayford reckons that soundtracks are best left inside the artist’s head
Eastern promise
Plus: there’s a thrilling Verdi rarity, Giovanna d’Arco, at Buxton but Lucia di Lammermoor is not an essential night at the opera
Night at the circus
Plus: Orson Welles and Laurence Olivier square up to each other at Southwark Playhouse in a play that is almost a triumph
Tax return
Plus: Radio 3’s The Last Moor reviewed: ‘The least important thing about Othello is the colour of his skin’
Serial thriller
Plus: Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen is the interior design equivalent of the Greek economy
Culture buff
It was a sparkling winter morning when the Art Gallery of NSW revealed the 47 finalists for the Archibald Prize…
Life
Fabulous Fabiano
Fabiano Caruana notched the result of his life at the Sinquefield Trophy in St Louis last year. Since then he…
No. 370
Black to play. This position is a variation from Kramnik-Naiditsch, Dortmund 2015. How can Black make a decisive material gain?…
Poetry in motion
In Competition No. 2906 you were invited to write a poem about an encounter in an airport. Craig Raine’s poem…
2220: Poem II
Unclued lights (two hyphened) are words (all but one of which are in ODQ) from a poem whose title appears…
To 2217: Poem
The poem was Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats. 1A, 16, 21A, 30, 38, 8, 13, 27, 29…
Urban foxes, the ginger menace
Suggestions on a postcard: we need to solve this scourge of our cities
The presentation of choice
Decision-making could be so much easier if information was presented differently






























































